Relevant Publications of Network Participants

Friday, 16 July 2010 11:08
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Hülya Adak: “Suffragettes of the empire, daughters of the republic: women auto/biographers narrate national history (1918-1935)”, New Perspectives on Turkey: Special Issue on Literature and the Nation, No.36, May 2007, 27-51

"Expressing Feminism and Nationalism in Autobiography: The Memoirs of an Egyptian Educator," Sidonie Smith and Julia Watson, eds., De/Colonizing the Subject: The Politics of Gender in Women's Autobiography, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1992; and slightly revised in Margot Badran, Feminism in Islam: Secular and Religious Convergences, Oxford: Oneworld, 2009.

“Between Patron and Piety: Jahan Ara Begum’s Sufi Affiliations and Articulations” in The Nexus of Sufism and Society: Arrangements of the Mystical in the Muslim World, 1200-1800 C.E., London: Routledge, 2010.

Marilyn Booth: “Between the Harem and the Houseboat: Fallenness, Gendered Spaces and the Female National Subject in 1920s Egypt” in Marilyn Booth (ed.), Harem Histories: Envisioning Places and Living Spaces, Durham and London: Duke University Press, forthcoming.

“‘The Muslim Woman’ as Celebrity Author and the Politics of Translating Arabic: Girls of Riyadh Goes on the Road”, Journal of Middle East Women’s Studies 6:3 (Fall 2010).

“Who Gets to Become the Liberal Subject? Ventriloquized Memoirs and the Individual in 1920s Egypt” in Christoph Schumann (ed.), Liberal Thought in the Eastern Mediterranean, Late 19th Century until the 1960s, Leiden: Brill, 2008, pp. 267-92.

“Infamous Women and Famous Wombs: Biography, Gender, and Islamist Concepts of Community in Contemporary Egypt” in Mary Ann Fay (ed.), Auto/Biography and the Creation of Identity and Community in the Middle East from the Early Modern to the Modern Period, New York: St. Martin’s, 2001, pp. 51-70.

Ruby Lal:Becoming Woman: Family and Civilization in the Colonial Encounter, circa 1800-1900 (forthcoming)

“Recasting the Woman Question: the ‘Girl-Child/Woman’ in the Colonial Encounter,” Interventions 10:3 (2008): 321-339; reproduced in Gyanendra Pandey (ed.), Subaltern Citizens and their Histories: Investigations from India and the USA, London and New York: Routledge, 2010, pp. 47-62.

“Hamara Daur-i Hayat: An Indian Muslim Woman Writes her Life,” in Telling Lives in India: Biography, Autobiography, and the Life History, ed.David Arnold and Stuart Blackburn, New Delhi: Permanent Black and Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2004, pp. 144-174.

“Schooling for What? The Cultural and Social Context of Women’s Education in a South Indian Muslim Family,” in Women, Education, and Family Structure in India, ed. C. Mukhopadhyay and S. Seymour, Boulder: Westview Press, 1994, pp. 135-164.